United States: A teacher in California has sadly died after being bitten by a bat in her classroom. Leah Seneng, 60, was bitten when she found the bat unexpectedly at Bryant Middle School in Dos Palos in October, according to her friend.
“I don’t know if she thought it was dead or what it was doing in her classroom and she was attempting to pick it up and take it outside,” Splotch said the outlet.
As reported by the people.com, “She didn’t wanna harm it. But that’s when, I guess it woke up or saw the light or whatever; what’s your connection and who and what are you talking to?
Splotch stated that Seneng did not exhibit symptoms of rabies after being bitten, but around a month later she got sick, was admitted to a hospital by her daughter, and put into a coma.

At Great Valley Center Medical Center, four days after she was taken there, Seneng drowned, dead, said KFSN and The Fresno Bee.
Subsequent to the unfortunate loss of Seneng, the Fresno County Department of Public Health stated that at the present there is no risk to the general public in terms of rabies risk in the area. The Fresno County and Merced County health department still conducts carrying out investigation, according to KFSN.
A representative of Fresno County told KFSN and The Fresno Bee that everybody who had contact with the Seneng got medical treatment. “As of now, there has been vaccine nation or both health care workers and their household contacts,” the rep said.
“It’s the same with any illness; anyone in close contact with the affected or their family is informed and possibly treated, if identified,” a health officer from Mecerd County said in an interview with The Fresno Bee.
Another official from the Fresno County, Deputy Health Officer Trinidad Solis, Supplements to the outlet, stating that it can take four to eight weeks for symptoms of rabies to appear inhuman. And if a vaccine is not given before that time, it will be nearly deadly, he noted it further.